Abstract
Purpose: The relentless rise in antimicrobial resistance is a major societal challenge and requires, as part of its solution, a better understanding of bacterial colonization and infection. To facilitate this, we developed a highly efficient no-wash red optical molecular imaging agent that enables the rapid, selective, and specific visualization of Gram-positive bacteria through a bespoke optical fiber–based delivery/imaging endoscopic device. Methods: We rationally designed a no-wash, red, Gram-positive-specific molecular imaging agent (Merocy-Van) based on vancomycin and an environmental merocyanine dye. We demonstrated the specificity and utility of the imaging agent in escalating in vitro and ex vivo whole human lung models (n = 3), utilizing a bespoke fiber–based delivery and imaging device, coupled to a wide-field, two-color endomicroscopy system. Results: The imaging agent (Merocy-Van) was specific to Gram-positive bacteria and enabled no-wash imaging of S. aureus within the alveolar space of whole ex vivo human lungs within 60 s of delivery into the field-of-view, using the novel imaging/delivery endomicroscopy device. Conclusion: This platform enables the rapid and specific detection of Gram-positive bacteria in the human lung.
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Mills, B., Megia-Fernandez, A., Norberg, D., Duncan, S., Marshall, A., Akram, A. R., … Stone, J. M. (2021). Molecular detection of Gram-positive bacteria in the human lung through an optical fiber–based endoscope. European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, 48(3), 800–807. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00259-020-05021-4
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